
No one could kill this particular player and surely even get close enough to kill the player in game. Now again could this be a pro player, absolutely, but I highly highly doubt it, because he blew tanks up with only two shots. Well to point out, this in fact was an actual hack, because this player had nothing, but head shots through the entire game. For example, I had a player hiding behind a rock, a large boulder rock shooting through the rock, now could this be a exploit or glitch or a actual hack. Well lets get be upfront, I have personally watched many hack in game and exploit the system easily and flawlessly. I will not name shame as EA and the EA admins call it, because what if these turds do not hack or just supposedly better than me and many others. Yet to stay on point, what is the point I should say here, because as gamers, as players, as many avid gamers who purchased the EA Brand, The EA title, and the EA games, falls upon deaf ears as what it feels like. Starwars Battlefront 2 and Battlefield V. In Battlefront 2, the practice quickly builds the number of credits players have to make in-game purchases with, without having to even physically compete in any matches.Įven though it's creative, the practice is skill cheating and unfair to your fellow players - so we don't recommend trying this at home.To be very clear, one of my huge reasons, big reasons why I have personally stepped away from EA titles is due to the hack fest continuing to ruin the very two games I truly loved and enjoyed playing on. The rubber band trick is an age-old classic used in games such as Oblivion to quickly improve a character's athletics skill. F0ngen showed that by attaching a rubber band around each toggle stick and securing its placement to the back of the controller, it actually does the same as Lowberg's robot by keeping the character moving and avoiding being booted as AFK.

Image credit Lowberg.īut fellow reddit user F0ngen proved there's actually a much simpler way to cheat your way to credits, using a couple of classic rubber bands.

The elaborate creation uses what look like lollipop sticks to press buttons and move the character around, allowing them to gain credits from a match without actually taking part and without being kicked from the game for being AFK. Reddit user Lowberg threw down the gauntlet when he created a "progression droid" (a robot) to "unskillfully collect credits". But several crafty players have found ways to cheat the system, with one trick involving a simple rubber band.


It's no secret it's difficult to grind for credits in Star Wars: Battlefront 2 - it's a big part of why so many players were angry at EA implementing paid loot boxes.
